Monday Media Review carries forward the work I'd intended to finish last Thursday. Today, we talk about a recent op-ed and its aftermath, as both reflect how difficult it is for many human beings to grasp the moral depravity we're living through.
War derangement diminishes us all--but differently. Do we have what it takes to "call in" the war-deranged humans all around us?
#Humanism #War #HumanBehaviour #Gaza
https://open.substack.com/pub/mlclark/p/what-an-op-ed-and-its-aftermath-teaches
I'm so glad you decided to write about Jacobson’s op-ed because it really threw me for a loop, and I hadn't seen any responses to it.
Yes, the struggle to hang on to coherent stories about our identities at all costs is, as you say, a human matter. Focusing on "humanity writ large" doesn't come naturally or easily for most of us who haven't already made up our minds to make that a practice.
(But yes, I was also struck by the fact that Jacobson's piece just *hung* there, on Oct 6. Adler's reply came Oct 13, and Chotiner's article on Oct 14, but that's not a responsible way to have a conversation. The Guardian should have coordinated a roundtable instead, from the outset, if it wanted to tackle that fear. Irresponsible conduct from legacy media - though where's the shock in that?)